How many scripts are on here? I see Latin, two different kinds of Chinese (I think), Japanese, Korean, Cyrillic, Greek, Arabic, Hebrew and some IPA symbols. There was one I couldn't recognize which reminded me of bopomofo.

kaenif wrote:My writing is so messy and the bet turned out to look like a kaf

For English now I [try to] write with the cursive script there. I used to write with the messy script (fourth row). Though now while taking notes I sometimes do a mix.

Also note my cursive ff that I made a thread about earlier.

For cursive capital A, I don't like to do a larger version of the lowercase a like they teach you in school. In fact, none of my capitals look like larger versions of smaller letters. (Even those that in printing would.)

EDIT: oh yea, I curve my d's inwards.

EDIT2: Also I don't like it when capital letters are separate from the rest of the word in cursive. Most of my capital letters attach, though some don't.

The italic script isn't perfected.

I don't know why I wrote a long s in baſsoon. It happens sometimes. (I use the long s sometimes when I deem it good looking, and baſsoon is a time I'd deem it not good looking. But whatever.)

The Chinese cursive (我唔知道點樣寫廣東話囧) was really me trying. I don't write like that everyday. (Mainly because in my Chinese class everyone writes in printing—I don't think cursive is acceptable.) The second column is what I use for my personal notes and the first column is what I use for assignments/school work.

I don't know Simplified Chinese, but I took the cursive 的 from my mom. (That last character in the simp chinese sentence is a 的)

Hangul again was also me trying. I'm not sure if that is even acceptable cursive hangul or not.

First is a part of my favourite Slovak epic poem, in two styles: the first one I wrote a bit more carefully and tried to keep all letters of a word connected, the other one I wrote as I normally would write it.

Then there are numerals and the entire Slovak alphabet.

After that the UDHR in Slovak, Serbian in Cyrillic and Croatian in Cursive Glagolitic.